Abby Whiteley Greeff

Abby Whiteley Greeff

About the Artist

Abby Whiteley Greeff is a Sydney-based artist working primarily in oil and acrylic. With a background in high-end interior design, she brings a refined sense of composition, texture, and restraint to her visual art practice. Her shift to painting was shaped by personal loss, prompting a deeper exploration of memory, emotion, and the passage of time through intuitive, expressive mark-making.

Abby’s work explores the beauty of everyday moments and the emotional resonance of the natural world. Drawing on her connection to nature and her design sensibility, she creates gestural, layered pieces that blur the line between observation and memory. She’s deeply interested in the idea of conservation—preserving not just the natural environment but also the fleeting moments of life: a passing glance, a shift in light, a feeling that’s hard to name. After losing her father to dementia, this desire to hold onto what was slipping away became central to her practice. Abby Whiteley Greeff is a multidisciplinary artist based on Sydney’s Northern Beaches. With a decade-long background in interior design, Abby brings a refined understanding of space, composition, and texture to her visual art practice. Her shift to full-time painting emerged from a deeply personal place — the loss of her father to an aggressive form of dementia. In processing this grief, painting became a way to preserve memory and capture fleeting emotional landscapes.

Her practice is guided by intuition and emotional truth, influenced by her creative lineage — Abby is related to renowned Australian artist Brett Whiteley. She works predominantly in oils and acrylics, using layered brushwork and softened tones to evoke a sense of memory, stillness, and transformation. Her paintings often explore nature, family, and the ephemeral moments of connection that shape our lives.

Abby’s work is both personal and universal, capturing the tension between holding on and letting go. With each piece, she seeks to blur the line between reality and recollection — preserving what is felt rather than what is seen. Her compositions invite viewers to slow down, to reflect, and to feel.

Through her art, Abby offers an ongoing exploration of presence, loss, and renewal an invitation to honour beauty in the ordinary and find peace in change.